Harold Horwood

Harold Andrew Horwood, CM (November 2, 1923 April 16, 2006) was a Newfoundland and Labrador novelist, non-fiction writer and politician. He was a Member of the Order of Canada.[1]

Early life

The son of Andrew Horwood and Vina Maidment, Horwood was born in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. He experienced a love of literature from a young age and while still an adolescent had already decided on a literary career. He pursued this goal despite the objections of his parents, with whom he did not get along, drawing more inspiration from the life of his paternal grandfather, John Horwood, a sea captain.[2]

He was educated at Prince of Wales Collegiate and worked at various labouring jobs for a number of years, which eventually led him to become a labour organizer. Around the same time, he and his brother Charlie founded a literary magazine called Protocol.[2] Beginning in 1948 he worked closely with Joey Smallwood in the campaign to bring Newfoundland into Confederation. From 1949 to 1951, he was a member of the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly, sitting as the member for Labrador for Smallwood's Liberals. After leaving politics he started writing a political column for the Evening Telegram newspaper. Though he supported Smallwood at first, by the mid-1950s he had become one of the premier's harshest critics.[3]

Writing career

His first book, Tomorrow Will be Sunday, was published in 1966. Though it was a novel, Horwood acknowledged its autobiographical elements. The novel White Eskimo (1972), arguably his best-known work, was inspired in part by Wilfred Grenfell. All told, he wrote more than 20 books, including novels, history, natural history, biography, and autobiography. His contribution to Newfoundland literature does not consist only of the works he produced, but also in the example he provided to young writers at a time when little literature had been produced in the province. However, as his political writing and some of his literature indicates, he did not always hold Newfoundland culture, particularly that of the 'outports' or fishing villages, in high regard.[4]

Other activities

During the 1960s he became an opponent of industrialization and began to interest himself in various 'counter-cultural' concerns. For a year he ran an alternative school in St. John's, known as "Animal Farm".[2]

Among Horwood's other accomplishments were being a founding member and head of the Writers' Union of Canada, and holding the position of writer-in-residence at the University of Western Ontario and University of Waterloo.[1]

Later life

In 1980, he was made a Member of the Order of Canada for his "contributions to Canadian literature".[1]

He lived his last twenty-five years in Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia. He and his wife Cornelia (Corky), whom he married in 1972, had two children, Andrew and Leah. He died of cancer at the age of 82 in Halifax.[2]

Bibliography[1][5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 D.R. BARTLETT. "Horwood, Harold Andrew". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 3, 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Sullivan, Joan (2006). "Harold Horwood, Writer 1913-2006". Newfoundland Portfolio: A History in Portraits. pp. 74–79. ISBN 1894377222.
  3. "Horwood, Harold Andrew". Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador. p. 1038.
  4. Gibson, Douglas (2014). "Harold Horwood". Stories About Storytellers: Publishing W.O. Mitchell, Mavis Gallant, Robertson Davies ... pp. 52–67. ISBN 1770905375.
  5. "Authors past and present - Book List". Newfoundland Writers' Guild.

External links

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